Leo Strauss and the Politics of Exile: The Making of a Political Philosopher

Leo Strauss and the Politics of Exile: The Making of a Political Philosopher

by Eugene Sheppard
Leo Strauss and the Politics of Exile: The Making of a Political Philosopher

Leo Strauss and the Politics of Exile: The Making of a Political Philosopher

by Eugene Sheppard

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Overview

Born in rural Hesse, Germany, Leo Strauss (1899–1973) became an active Zionist and philosopher during the tumultuous and fractious Weimar Republic. As Eugene R. Sheppard demonstrates in this groundbreaking and engaging book, Strauss gravitated towards such thinkers as Franz Rosenzweig, Martin Heidegger, and Carl Schmitt as he sought to identify and overcome fundamental philosophical, political, and theological crises. The rise of Nazism impelled Strauss as a young Jewish émigré, first in Europe and then in America, to grapple with—and accommodate his thought to—the pressing challenges of exile. In confronting his own state of exile, Strauss enlisted premodern Jewish thinkers such as Moses Maimonides and Baruch Spinoza who earlier addressed the problem of reconciling their competing loyalties as philosophers and Jews. This is the first study to frame Strauss’s political philosophy around his critique of liberalism and the problem of exile. Sheppard follows Strauss from Europe to the United States, a journey of a conservative Weimar Jew struggling with modern liberalism and the existential and political contours of exile. Strauss sought to resolve the conflicts of a Jew unwilling to surrender loyalty to his ancestral community and equally unwilling to adhere to the strictures of orthodox observance. Strauss saw truth and wisdom as transcending particular religious and national communities, as well as the modern enlightened humanism in which he himself had been nurtured. In his efforts to navigate between the Jewish and the philosophical, the ancient and the modern, Berlin and New York, Strauss developed a distinctively programmatic way of reading and writing “between the lines.” Sheppard recaptures the complexity and intrigue of this project which has been ignored by those who both reject and claim Strauss’s legacy.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611687699
Publisher: Brandeis University Press
Publication date: 10/07/2014
Series: The Tauber Institute Series for the Study of European Jewry
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 188
File size: 910 KB

About the Author

MARGALIT SHILO is a professor in the Land of Israel Studies Department at Bar-Ilan University and the author of Princess or Prisoner? Jewish Women in Jerusalem, 1840–1914.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments xi Introduction 1 Chapter 1. Antisemitism and Neo-Kantianism: From Kirchhain to Marburg (1899 / 1920) 9 Chapter 2. The Formation of a Weimar Conservative Jew (1921 / 1932) 17 Chapter 3. European Exile and Reorientation (1932 / 1937) 54 Chapter 4. Persecution and the Art of Writing: The New York Years (1938 / 1948) 81 Conclusion: Looking Back on Weimar and the Politics of Exile 118 Abbreviations 131 Notes 133 Index 179

What People are Saying About This

Peter Eli Gordon

"For those of us who cleave to the rather un-Straussian conviction that the historical origins of philosophical ideas somehow inform the ideas themselves, Eugene Sheppard's book fufills a crucial need. Leo Strauss and the Politics of Exile helps us to understand the existential dimension in Strauss's own experience of exile--the trauma of politico-cultural dislocation--which constituted the very grounding for Strauss's reflections upon both the modern Jewish condition and the place of philosophy in the modern world."
Peter Eli Gordon, Harvard University

Samuel Moyn

“In this excellent historical genealogy of Leo Strauss's thought, Eugene Sheppard moves beyond uninformed polemics on both sides to provide hitherto unavailable information as well as expert historical knowledge of the contexts in which Straussianism was born. Especially noteworthy are the book's pioneering treatments of Strauss against the backdrop of German-Jewish intellectual history and the history of Zionist controversies, for as Sheppard abundantly shows, the details of these contexts are decisive for making sense of Strauss's texts. Sheppard's interpretation of the Straussian philosopher as Jewish exile is novel and exciting. And it prompts us to wonder if this 'best friend of liberal democracy' ever succeeded in fully breaking from the explosive politics of the Weimar Right.”

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